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Friday, 25 December 2015

In the Mood for Love - A review of the new BFI Film Classics monograph.

Conditions of
Production

In general we know
little and care less about how particular films are made. Not true in all cases
of course. Orson Welles career has provided us with acres of speculation,
innuendo and some solid information about how he got do what he did across
Europe and in Hollywood. We know a lot about Rita Hayworth from what she did
for the great man for The Lady from
Shanghai but dare I say next to nothing about what happened when she and
Charles Vidor made the estimable Cover
Girl and Gilda.

One of those directors
who does provoke an endless fascination with his working methods is the Hong
Kong based Wong Kar Wai. In his BFI Film Classics monograph on Wong’s In the Mood for Love (Hong Kong, 2000)
Tony Rayns refers early on to Wong’s ‘aleatory methods, his habit of allowing
his habit of allowing his films to determine their own tone, shape and
direction while they are being made.’ It’s a film that stands up to endless scrutiny
about how it was made as much as what it means and how that meaning is created.

The
inter-connectedness of Wong’s filmography is filled with parallels, elisions, false starts
and dead ends. As Wong’s subtitler for much of this career Rayns has had a close-up
knowledge of Wong’s working methods over a substantial part of his career. Wong has a quite unique capacity to keep ever re-writing, re-shooting and re-editing,
sometimes over the course of years and occasionally in almost manic defiance of
key festival deadlines. Rayns says that Wong told him of his “urgent need to ‘change’,
but rationalised it as a need to stay one step ahead of the world’s many Wong
Kar Wai imitators.”!

(It may never happen
but one book we should all look forward to is the tome mentioned in Rayns
acknowledgements of what he calls the sometimes hair-raising tales of his own
experiences with Wong’s Jet Tone company.)

Part of the way that Rayns
goes about his task is to take over thirty pages to set down each sequence and
occasionally each shot in a scene breakdown of extreme detail. When you start
reading it you may become frustrated at the minutiae involved but when I then
went straight to a viewing of the film on a French-issue double disc “Edition
Limitee”, I was surprised at how frequently I paused the disc to check on the
information about the scene Rayns has provided. This detail of course unearths
layers of meaning that I had simply been unaware of when, the only viewings I’ve
undertaken, I watched the film twice back in 2000 (once with Italian subtitles!).
In those circumstances, the memories had reduced themselves to vague images of
the couple alone in the street, Nat King Cole on the soundtrack and a trace
element about unfulfilled passion. Now of course, I’m not even sure about that
passion but the book provides much information on that point.

This is quite superb
analysis. It makes you instantly want to see not only In the Mood for Love but the director’s early Days of Being Wild and the
later 2046 especially. Just trying to
discover the continuities and discontinuities will be rewarding in itself. Much
of it as Rayns notes, will be speculation. Wong leaves his films loose. As
Rayns sums up: “The film’s evasions,
elisions, exclusions, disjunctions andenigmas – even its momentary fixations on
decor- are al about the imperfect retrieval of a memory, while its evocative
and insistent music is all about smiling or sobbing through the parts that time
has heightened or discoloured or erased. The tenor of the ending is clear:
time to move on.

Rayns moves on to a
final chapter of ‘miscellany’, notes on a variety of things ranging from gossip
about a ping pong match of female casting between Wong and Zhang Yimou, casting
other parts and the making of some of the multiplicity of side works that
accompany the film, some of which can be found on various home video editions
of the film. All useful and all contributing to this very rich and robust
appreciation of a major film-maker who back in 2000 may have reached his peak
with In the Mood for Love.

In the Mood for Love (Huayang Nianhua) by Tony Rayns. BFI Film Classics. A BFI book published by Palgrave, London, 2015

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This is a blog devoted to things of interest to cinephiles. The subjects are randomly selected in the manner of a diary and are somewhat oriented to Sydney, Australia. In the past I used to send out these entries via regular emails but this has trailed off and its best to check here for anything new.You can contact me direct via email at filmalert101@gmail.com